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Semantic Web Opportunities for Digital Libraries

Semantic Web Opportunities for Digital Libraries. ELAG 2008. Laura Hollink, Antoine Isaac, V éronique Malaisé, Guus Schreiber Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Computer Science Department. Why would you want to use Semantic Web techniques?. Two reasons:

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Semantic Web Opportunities for Digital Libraries

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  1. Semantic Web Opportunities for Digital Libraries ELAG 2008 Laura Hollink, Antoine Isaac, Véronique Malaisé, Guus Schreiber Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Computer Science Department

  2. Why would you want to use Semantic Web techniques? Two reasons: 1. Machine-processable representation of semantic information • Your search engine can reason with the knowledge stored in your thesaurus

  3. Use case: “Find paintings of a similar style.” KLIMT, Gustav Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I 1907 Oil and gold on canvas 138 x 138 cm Austrian Gallery, Vienna MUNCH, Edvard The Scream 1893 Oil, tempera and pastel on cardboard 91 x 73.5 cm National Gallery, Oslo

  4. Why would you want to use Semantic Web techniques? 2. Interoperability • Link your collection to other collections • Let other people/institutes link to your collection • Enable cross-collection access • Link your KOS to other KOSs • Use the knowledge encoded in other KOSs

  5. Overview • Semantic Web: for libraries • Interoperability • Semantic Search in the E-Culture Web Demonstrator

  6. The Web: resources and links URL Web link URL

  7. The Semantic Web: typed resources and typed links Painting “The girl with green eyes” MOMA San Francisco creator Henri Matisse Web link URL URL

  8. SW Building Blocks I • Resources: • Everything that can be identified on or outside the web. • http://www.artchive.com/artchive/m/matisse/grn_eyes.jpg • http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/creator • http://e-culture.multimedian.nl/ns/getty/ulan#500017300 (matisse) • http://dbpedia.org/resource/Beatrix_of_the_Netherlands • Triples of three resources • Subject - predicate - object • grn_eyes.jpg - dc:creator - ulan:matisse • MyDocument1 - date - “2008-01-14” • Beatrix - monarch of - The Netherlands • The Netherlands - part of - Benelux

  9. Article Document The_Netherlands subClassOf type hasCapital file1 partOf Amsterdam type par3 defines City SW Building Blocks II • Graphs of triples

  10. SW Building Blocks III • Standard languages to represent these graphs: • RDF • RDF-Schema • OWL

  11. SW for Libraries and Archives SW research targeted towards cultural heritage: • Standard language for library and information sciences: SKOS • Research projects for access to cultural heritage: • CATCH program • MultimediaN E-Culture • Library use-cases in evaluation studies (OAEI)

  12. Interoperability Problem

  13. Interoperability • Syntactic interoperability • using data formats that you can share • XML family is the preferred option • Semantic interoperability • How to share meaning / concepts • Technology for finding and representing semantic links

  14. Interoperability: using standards • SKOS • broaderTerm • narrowerTerm • relatedTerm • exactMatch, narrowMatch, broadMatch, relatedMatch • VRA Core 4.0 Elements: e.g. • title • location • date • earliestDate (circa) • latestDate (circa) • material, etc.

  15. Interoperability: reusing vocabularies

  16. Interoperability: Links between vocabularies I or:the myth of a unified vocabulary • In large virtual collections there are always multiple vocabularies • In multiple languages • Every vocabulary has its own perspective • You can’t just merge them • But you can use vocabularies jointly by defining a limited set of links • “Vocabulary alignment” • It is surprising what you can do with just a few links

  17. Interoperability: Links between vocabularies II • Find semantic links between vocabulary terms: • Van Gogh (WordNet) is Van Gogh (ULAN) • Painter (WordNet) is more specific than Creator (VRA) • Derain (ULAN) related-to Fauve (AAT)) • Automatic techniques exists, but performance varies. • Often combination of automatic and manual alignment.

  18. STICH demonstrator I • 2 collections • National Library of the Netherlands • French National Library • Goal: access objects from one using the vocabulary of the other and vice versa. • Means: automatic semantic alignment

  19. STICH demonstrator II

  20. Principle 1: Semantic annotation MUNCH, Edvard The Scream 1893 Oil, tempera and pastel on cardboard 91 x 73.5 cm National Gallery, Oslo

  21. Principle 2: Semantic search Query “Paris” Paris PartOf Montmartre

  22. Principle 3: Cross-Collection Search “Tokugawa” AAT style/period Edo (Japanese period) Tokugawa SVCN period Edo

  23. E-Culture Web Demonstrator

  24. Disambiguation of search term

  25. Faceted search Faceted search

  26. Zoekterm: ‘Tokugawa’ Semantisch Zoeken: tokugawa

  27. Experimental: Relation Search I ?

  28. Experimental: Relation Search II Choose URIs of Van Gogh and Gaugain. Result: what relates them? 1. Van Gogh – usesStyle - impressionism – hasPainter - Gaugain. 2. People network that connects Gauguin and Van Gogh: Van Gogh - studentOf - Cormon, Fernand -teacherOf - Bernard, Emile - colleagueOf Gauguin.

  29. Current ‘Hot Topics’ in SW • Scalability • Conversion to SW standards • Ontology Alignment • Metadata extraction (from text, from semi-structured souces)

  30. Final message • Semantic Web can improve access within and across collections. • Structured knowledge is available for reuse. • Social barriers have to be overcome: • E.g. licences on The Getty vocabulaires

  31. Credits • The MultimediaNE-Culture project • The NWO program CATCH • STICH • CHOICE • MuNCH • The eContentplus TELplus project

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